Small Boat
Vincent Delecroix, trans. from the French by Helen Stevenson. Mariner, $25 (128p) ISBN 978-0-06-349169-4
A French coast guard officer confronts the existential dilemma of her job in the thought-provoking English-language debut by novelist and philosopher Delecroix. As a coordinator of sea rescues in the English Channel, the unnamed narrator is regularly forced to decide whether to send or withhold assistance for sinking boats. Most often the doomed crafts are carrying refugees making the perilous crossing to the U.K., and her decisions frequently come down to whether the craft is in her country’s waters, among other calculations. One evening, she communicates with a man on a raft of refugees drifting somewhere along the line between French and English waters. He calls her 14 times over the course of a couple of hours as the boat slowly sinks. All the refugees end up drowning. The news causes intense hand wringing on both sides of the Channel, and most of the novel consists of the narrator replaying that night as well as her subsequent exchange with a police investigator. The narrative takes on intriguing layers as the investigator grills her about her decisions and the recordings of her radio calls with the man, in which she attempts to absolve herself of guilt (“I didn’t ask you to leave”). It’s a satisfying exploration of a moral gray area. (Apr.)
Details
Reviewed on: 03/19/2026
Genre: Fiction
Compact Disc - 979-8-228-70938-6
MP3 CD - 979-8-228-70939-3
Open Ebook - 128 pages - 978-0-06-349171-7

